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7 gets the AVI, 9 does not
Why is Sony Vegas 7 able to recognize–i.e. ‘project’–video from a rendered AVI that Vegas 9 cannot?
I got this semi-cumbersome process of acquiring the media from my Panasonic HDD consumer camera:
–Import the file(s) into my consumer NLE (Magix Pro 14) on my OLD laptop, then render that video out as either an AVI or MPeg (depending on how ‘nice’ I want it to look).
–Use this rendered footage on Sony Vegas.NOW. . .
Keep in mind that it is my OLD laptop that has both ‘magix’ and Sony Vegas 7 installed on it; my new laptop has Vegas 9 64-bit at this moment.
I rendered some footage from my HDD cam as AVIs on my old laptop, then checked it out on Vegas 7 to make sure it’s good to go. I then took the external hard drive that the footage was rendered on, and began to try and edit on Vegas 9 on my new laptop, and all I get is the audio. No video recognized. . .nothing!
This turned out to be really surprising to me, because Vegas 9 is able to recognize AVIs from another, crappier video camera that 7 can not. Owing to this, I was under the impression that Vegas had expanded its list of recognizable codecs.
So, ultimately. . .what’s the deal? Why can 7 recognize the video, but 9 cannot?
I have found a way to remedy the matter (for the time-being) by taking the rendered AVI, importing it into 7, then RErendering it as an AVI that can be used with 9, but this is, uh, really, really cumbersome, a slow moving process, space and time consuming, and makes it difficult to keep track of files.To let you know: I have looked into downloadable freeware that transfers mod files–the kind my panasonic makes–into AVIs, but I’m not too trusting of any of that right now. (Unless someone has a good lead for me.)
Mostly, I’m just vexed on the issue, and am looking for ways that it can be fixed. . .I just purchased 9 not too long ago, but would’ve stuck with 7 if I could have run it on a 64-bit system. Now I’m wondering what’s going on with the good people at Sony.